The principal issue presented by these consolidated cases is whether the Federal Employee Retire *486 ment Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1381 (1976), precludes criminal prosecution under G. L. c. 151D, § 11, as appearing in St. 1973, c. 1169, § 1, for the failure of employers to make contributions to employee pension plans regulated by ERISA. We conclude that ERISA preempts § 11 of the State statute, precluding such prosecution.
The cases are before us on a report of questions by a District Court judge pursuant to Mass. R. Crim. P. 34,
In their separate proceedings, each defendant claimed a jury trial and moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that G. L. c. 151D, § 11, is unconstitutional and that, regardless of its constitutionality, the State statute is preempted by the Federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. § 1144. Because of the identity of issues *487 presented, the two cases were consolidated. The District Court judge reported to the Appeals Court five questions of law concerning Federal preemption and the constitutionality of the State statute. The text of the reported questions is set forth in the margin. 3 We transferred the cases to this court on our own motion. As our conclusion that ERISA precludes prosecutions under G. L. c. 151D, §11, disposes of these cases, we confine our discussion to that issue.
In enacting ERISA in 1974, Congress determined that comprehensive and uniform regulation of employee benefit plans was necessary in light of the enormous growth in size, scope, and number of such plans and the attendant increase in their economic and social impact. See 29 U.S.C. § 1001(a) to (c) (1976). In addition to imposing reporting and disclosure requirements, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1021 to 1031, ERISA establishes minimum standards for pension plans, §§ 1051 to 1086, and provides for civil remedies for violations of the act’s provisions, §§ 1132, 1140. For some violations, criminal penalties may be imposed, § 1131.
Federal preemption of the State’s authority to regulate employee benefit plans is contained in 29 U.S.C. § 1144 (1976), which states that with certain exceptions, the provisions of ERISA “shall supersede any and all State laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit *488 plan” covered by the act. § 1144(a). Qualified exceptions to this broad preemption are made for State laws regulating insurance, banking, and securities. § 1144(b)(2). 4 Further, the preemption provision “shall not apply to any generally applicable criminal law of a State.” § 1144(b)(4).
All parties agree that the employee benefit plans involved in these cases are subject to the applicable requirements of ERISA. Nor is there dispute over whether G. L. c. 151D, §11, penalizing delinquent contributions to employee retirement plans, “relates to” an employee benefit plan. Thus, there would seem to be little room for argument that the sweeping language of § 1144(a) requires preemption of G. L. c. 151D, § 11, unless the State statute may be characterized as a “generally applicable criminal law” under § 1144(b) (4). Despite the broad preemptive language of § 1144(a), however, the Commonwealth argues that preemption should not be found unless there is an actual conflict between ERISA and G. L. c. 151D, § 11. No such conflict exists here, urges the Commonwealth; permitting prosecutions under § 11 for failure to make the contributions that an employer is contractually obliged to make would not interfere with the requirements of ERISA.
The Commonwealth’s preemption analysis might have some force had Congress not stated so explicitly in § 1144(a) its intent to overridé “any and all” State laws relating to employee benefit plans. Only when Congress has not clearly expressed its intent to preempt State law must a court decide whether the application of the State law would frustrate the purposes of the Federal l^w.
5
See
Malone
v.
*489
White Motor Corp.,
Not only the language of the ERISA preemptive provision but also its legislative history compel the conclusion that Congress “rejected a concept of preemption limited to conflicting or duplicate state law, in favor of applying the principle in its ‘broadest sense.’”
Wadsworth
v.
Whaland,
Having determined that G. L. c. 151D, § 11, is not exempted, under general principles of the doctrine of preemption, from the preemptive impact of 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a), we must decide whether § 11 is nonetheless exempted under the saving clause of § 1144(b) (4), which leaves intact “any generally applicable criminal law of a State.”
*490
The Commonwealth contends that § 11 is a “generally applicable” law because it punishes all employers, as well as certain corporate officers, who fail to abide by their contractual obligations to make contributions to retirement benefit plans.
7
Such reasoning was adopted by a New York County Court in
Goldstein
v.
Mangano,
The § 1144(b)(4) exception from preemption for “generally applicable” State criminal laws appears designed to prevent otherwise criminal activity from being immunized from prosecution simply because the activity “relates to” an employee benefit plan. The exception seems directed toward criminal laws that are intended to apply to conduct generally — criminal laws against larceny and embezzlement, for example. By virtue of § 1144(b) (4), a State is not precluded from prosecuting, under a theft statute applicable to the entire population, an employer who steals money from an employee benefit plan, simply because the theft involved such a plan. But by limiting the § 1144(b) (4) exception to criminal laws of
general
applicability, Congress apparently intended to preempt State criminal statutes aimed specifically at employee benefit plans. See
National Carriers’ Conference Comm.
v.
Heffernan,
As prosecution of these defendants for violations of G. L. c. 151D, § 11, is precluded under ERISA, we answer “Yes” to reported questions 1 and 2, and “No” to reported question 3. The cases are remanded to the District Court judge for dismissal of the complaints.
So ordered.
Notes
Chapter 151D, §11, provides in pertinent part that “any person or employee, and the president, secretary, and treasurer ... of a corporation which is an employer, who is party to an agreement to pay or provide the contributions or benefits covered by [c. 151D] . . ., and who refuses or fails or neglects to pay such contributions or payments within thirty days after [they] are required to be made shall be punished by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars or by imprisonment in a jail or house of correction for not more than one year, or both.”
“(1) Is prosecution under G. L. c. 151D, § 11 preempted, superseded, or otherwise precluded by ERISA under the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution?
“(2) Is prosecution under G. L. c. 151D, § 11 specifically precluded by 29 U.S.C.A. § 1144 if c. 151D, § 11 is deemed not to be generally applicable criminal law?
“(3) Is G. L. c. 151D, § 11 a generally applicable criminal law?
“(4) Is G. L. c. 151D, § 11 unconstitutional on its face under the Due Process clauses of the federal and state constitutions where:
“(a) there is no statutory requirement that the defendants or corporate employers have the ability to pay any sums that were due the Fund at the times complained of; and
“(b) the sums due the Fund are corporate debts and neither defendant signed the Agreement individually?
“(5) What, if any, is the mens rea or criminal intent which must be proven at trial by the Commonwealth ? ”
Also excepted are causes of action arising before January 1, 1975. 29 U.S.C. § 1144(b)(1).
Most cases dealing with preemption, including those cited by the Commonwealth, have involved Federal laws containing no clear expression of intent to preempt, thereby necessitating judicial determination whether the Federal law was in fact incompatible with the State law. See, e.g.,
Ray
v.
Atlantic Richfield Co.,
The cases cited detail the legislative history of § 1144(a), focusing in part on the fact that the original version of ERISA contained a far narrower preemption clause, which was replaced by the current comprehensive provision in an effort to avoid litigation about the applicability of State law.
See note 2, supra.
The cited cases do not involve criminal laws.
Goldstein
v.
Mangano,
